American Honda Motor said today that to celebrate the 60th Anniversary of its first F1 Race Entry that during Monterey Car Week on August 14-17the RA272 racer will lap the Laguna Seca Historic Races. Today is the 60th anniversary of Honda’s F1 debut at the 1964 German Grand Prix. The V12-powered Honda RA272 first won at the 1965 Mexico Grand Prix in November as the first race car from a Japanese automaker to win a Formula 1 race. Los Angeles born driver Richie Ginther was at the wheel. Powered by a transverse-mounted 1.5-liter V12 engine capable of 13,000 rpm, RA272 ran most recently at the Goodwood Festival of Speed 2024 (July 11-14) piloted by Miyagi-san and current F1 race driver Yuki Tsunoda. (read AutoInformed.com on: Honda Racing has a New UK Formula One Base)
“Soichiro Honda, a former racer himself, believed in competition as a means to improve his company, its engineers and its products. A key example of the Honda ‘Challenging Spirit’ in action, racing is ingrained in the corporate culture of Honda, more than any other automaker. Throughout its history, on two wheels and four, Honda has raced and won at the highest levels of motorsports all over the world,” Honda said in a press release. Continue reading










Soothsayer Shortfall – US Light Vehicle Sales Flat in July
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US Light Vehicle (LV) sales fell by 0.4% YoY in July, to 1.30 million. When sales contracted in June largely as the result of the CDK cyberattack,* it was expected by industry soothsayers that the market would experience a significant rebound in July. It didn’t happen. According to preliminary estimates released today by the respected GlobalData** consultancy, Light Vehicle (LV) sales fell by 0.4% YoY.
“According to initial estimates, retail sales totaled 1,148,000 units in July, while fleet sales finished at 152,000 units, accounting for 11.7% of total volumes. The low fleet total was likely due to a greater focus on serving retail customers whose purchases were delayed by the CDK cyberattack in June,” GlobalData said. Continue reading →